Results 21 - 30
of
22,326
Table 2 TECHNIQUE KNOWLEDGE AND USE AS FUNCTION OF AGE
2003
"... In PAGE 11: ... When we plot the introduction date against the degree of use by the respondents, we arrive at Figure 6. Although these charts do not show a clear trend, grouping the tech- niques by decade does ( Table2 ). In particular, these preliminary results show a classic correlation between age of the technique and both the knowledge and the use of techniques within the user community.... In PAGE 11: ... In particular, these preliminary results show a classic correlation between age of the technique and both the knowledge and the use of techniques within the user community. Thus, Table2 shows a general increase in knowledge of techniques as they get older (53%, 88%, and 97% as we move from 10 to 20 to 40 years old) as well as a general increase in their use (28%, 62%, and 72%). In both cases, we see a spike in popularity among the most recently introduced tech- niques due to the lemmingineering phenomenon (Davis, 1993b).... In PAGE 12: ...average, survey respondents knew of the existence of 84% of the 17 elicita- tion techniques included in the survey (see Table2 ). If we believe that our survey respondents are representative of the population at large, then there Comparative Technology Transfer and Society, December 2003, vol.... ..."
Cited by 1
Table 1 Knowledge Classification for the Clinical Medicine Domain
"... In PAGE 22: ...ion for communication with other users. Typical concepts are document , report and extract . The GEHR electronic health record project includes a logical EHR extract concept which defines the package of information to be sent to other systems. In summary, concepts in the second level can be classified into a number of qualitatively different layers, or sub-ontologies, which for health are summarised in Table1 . This particular classification is not claimed to be normative of course; rather it represents one way of partitioning the health domain to make it more tractable for the design of formal ontologies.... In PAGE 23: ... Compositions of level 2 concepts - transactions for current medications, problem list etc -EHR 4 communica- tion Concepts relating to the packaging of information for the purpose of sharing. Extracts or pack- ages derived from level 3 information - document - EHR extract Level Meaning Expression Examples Table1 Knowledge Classification for the Clinical Medicine Domain FIGURE 8 A multi-level knowledge space . .... ..."
Table 1: Knowledge about cooking tips.
2001
"... In PAGE 5: ... (P2) A better cooking performance will be achieved by the participants under the Polite condition than those under the Casual condition. Results and Discussions Table1 shows the number of cooking tips given by the EAs and also described in the corresponding Web pages which were correctly answered in the post cooking questionnaire test. Table 1 shows that three participants (a38a36a39a4a40a41a38a43a42 ) assigned to the Polite condition acquired more tips correctly than the two participants (a44 a39 and a44a46a45 ) assigned to the Casual condi- tion.... In PAGE 5: ... Results and Discussions Table 1 shows the number of cooking tips given by the EAs and also described in the corresponding Web pages which were correctly answered in the post cooking questionnaire test. Table1 shows that three participants (a38a36a39a4a40a41a38a43a42 ) assigned to the Polite condition acquired more tips correctly than the two participants (a44 a39 and a44a46a45 ) assigned to the Casual condi- tion. The exemplary cooking outcomes in the Polite and the Ca- sual conditions are shown in Figure 6.... ..."
Cited by 1
Table 3 Tabulated results of the 20 trials in each setting. The columns represent: (a) the number of trials that generated cooperative
"... In PAGE 6: ... Twenty trials were conducted in each setting with popula- tion sizes of 10, 20, 30, 40, and 50 parents. Table3 provides results in five behavioral cate- gories. The assessment of apparent trends or in- stability was admittedly subjective, and in some cases the correct decision was not obvious (e.... ..."
Table 1. Size of analysed nets and analysis efforts using INA and PROD (cooperation model).
"... In PAGE 9: ... Dead states caused by one controller version (arm version 2) have been found very fast by construc- tion of the (surprisingly small) stubborn set reduced reachability graph. Table1 summarises some of the steps carried out for the analysis of the cooperation model. For comparison, we also tried to apply OBDD-based methods.... ..."
Table 1 Means for Rates of Cooperative, Intrusive, and Unsuccessful Interruptions as a Function of Condition
"... In PAGE 13: ... The Canadian speaker-Canadian listener, Chinese speaker-Canadian listener, and Canadian speaker-Chinese listener conditions used English in their conversations, whereas the Chinese speaker-Chinese listener condition conversed in Mandarin Chinese. Means of rates for intrusive,cooperative,and unsuccessful interrup- tions were calculated across the four experimental conditions; they are presented in Table1 . The unit of analysis in each condition was a dyad rather than an individual speaker or listener because conversation is a joint activity between conversational partners (Bavelas amp; Segal, 1982; Clark amp; Brennan, 1991; Clark amp; Schaefer, 1989; Goffman, 1967; Goodwin,1981;Grice,1975;Roger amp; Nesshoever,1987;Schegloff,1982; Tannen, 1994).... In PAGE 14: ...Listener Condition: Testing Hypothesis 1a Hypothesis 1a predicted that intrusive interruptions would be seen more frequently than cooperative interruptions in Canadian speaker-Canadian listener conversations. As shown in Table1 , the mean rate for intrusive interruption was higher than the mean rate for cooperative interruption,but no statistically significant difference was reached. Thus, Hypothesis 1a was not supported.... In PAGE 14: ...eached. Thus, Hypothesis 1a was not supported. The Chinese Speaker-Chinese Listener Condition: Testing Hypothesis 1b Hypothesis 1b predicted that cooperative interruptions would be seen more frequently than intrusive interruptions in Chinese speaker-Chinese listener interactions. As indicated in Table1 , the mean rate for cooperative interruption was higher than the mean rate for intrusive interruption. ANOVA revealed that the difference was statistically significant, F(1, 9) = 12.... In PAGE 14: ... The Chinese Speaker-Canadian Listener Condition: Testing Hypothesis 2b Hypothesis 2b predicted that intrusive interruptions would be seen more frequently than cooperative interruptions in the Chinese speaker-Canadian listener condition. As shown in Table1 , the mean rates for intrusive interruption and cooperative interruption were sim- ilar for this condition. Thus, Hypothesis 2b was not supported.... In PAGE 16: ... The doctors exhibited more intrusive interruptions than did patients, and the patients dis- played more cooperative interruptions than did doctors. Unsuccessful Interruptions The mean rates for unsuccessful interruptions are presented in Table1 . As shown in Table 1, the mean rates for the two intercultural conditions (Canadian speaker-Chinese listener and Chinese speaker-Canadian listener) were higher than mean rates in the two intracultural conditions (Canadian speaker-Canadian listener and Chinese speaker-Chinese listener).... ..."
Table 2: Experimental Relative Frequencies and E ciency (All rounds) Game Treatment Cooperation Coordination E ciency
"... In PAGE 14: ... Result 1 Subjects apos; actions are in uenced to some extent, but not completely, by strategic consid- erations. The third column of Table2 shows the aggregated (all subjects, all rounds) relative frequencies of cooperation in each cell of the experiment. Notice that di erences in the level of cooperation are much more stark between games than between information conditions; cooperation is generally highest in the SH cells and lowest in the PD cells.... In PAGE 15: ... Result 2 The addition of either observation or communication increases the frequency of coopera- tion relative to the control sessions, though the relative e cacy of observation and communication depends on the game. Supporting evidence for this second result is provided in Table2 . Consider rst the PD cells.... In PAGE 16: ...19 In the SH cells, there are no signi cant di erences between treatments. This lack of signi cance may seem surprising, since Table2 suggests that adding either observation or cheap talk increases the overall frequency of cooperation substantially. The explanation for this discrepancy is that there is a lot of variance in the control sessions; in two of the three control sessions, the frequency of cooperation is close to 50%, while in the other one, it is much higher (81%) and comparable to that in the non{control cells.... In PAGE 17: ... Result 3 In the games with multiple equilibria, cheap talk aids successful coordination on a pure{ strategy Nash equilibrium. According to Table2 (fourth column), coordination in the SH game is most frequent in the cheap talk cell; it is signi cantly more likely than in the control at the 5% level (robust rank{order test), and it is signi cantly more likely than in the observation treatment at the 10% level. In the... In PAGE 19: ... A nal way in which the information treatment a ects aggregate behavior is its e ect on joint payo e ciency. (See Table2 , fth column.)... In PAGE 31: ... quot; According to any of the criteria discussed in the previous section, in Stag Hunt, words are relatively more useful than actions, while in Chicken and Prisoner apos;s Dilemma, actions are relatively more useful than words. It is worth noting that there is a correspondence between the usefulness of a set of signals (according to any of these criteria) and its ability to e ect high{payo outcomes; in all three games, the more useful set of signals is also the one that leads to higher payo s (recall the last column of Table2 ), though the di erence in payo s may not be signi cant. Indeed, it should not be surprising that both sets of signals lead to payo s that are higher than when no signals are available, since both actions and words are at least somewhat informative in 25A remark about other types of non{signals is in order here.... ..."
Table 3. Additional knowledge sources that can be integrated into an ontology for PACS integration
"... In PAGE 9: ... Table 2 presents a variety of potential applica- tions of our ontology. The knowledge sources needed to realize these use cases are described in Table3 . Two future applications of our ontology would be to create a decision support application for referring physicians and to make reporting templates for radiologists.... ..."
Table 2. Results with cooperation
2005
"... In PAGE 12: ...66 GHz Pentium 4), and therefore the execution time is biased by the parallelism inherent in the simulation, which loads the single processor with a considerable computational overhead. In Table 1, we show the best results obtained in terms of RMSD and energy without cooperation, while in Table2 cooperation was active. The energy considered here is the one presented in Section 4; the contributions of cooperative computational fields are not considered.... ..."
Cited by 2
Table 2. Results with cooperation
2005
"... In PAGE 12: ...66 GHz Pentium 4), and therefore the execution time is biased by the parallelism inherent in the simulation, which loads the single processor with a considerable computational overhead. In Table 1, we show the best results obtained in terms of RMSD and energy without cooperation, while in Table2 cooperation was active. The energy considered here is the one presented in Section 4; the contributions of cooperative computational fields are not considered.... ..."
Cited by 2
Results 21 - 30
of
22,326